Though they have scouted all the opponents, McInerney tells the players to focus on their own games.

“Sometimes it’s more important to concentrate on your own game rather than worry about what other people are going to do,” she said.

No. 29 Oklahoma State comes into this tournament as the No. 4 seed despite having senior Kanyapat Narattana, who is ranked 59th in singles.

“It’s going to be good competition,” McInerney said. “It’s going to give us a good idea of where we are right now and what we need to work on moving forward.”

ITA experimentation seen at the NAU match will continue in this tournament. There will be three sets of doubles with no warmups and a match-breaker for the third set of singles.

This is one of the many differences with which players may not be familiar. The tournament is indoors, and McInerney said her squad is the only team that isn’t accustomed to indoor conditions.

“It’s good, you need to face all kinds of challenges,” McInerney said. “That’s going to make us better no matter what happens this weekend.”

The tournament continues Sunday with a consolation match of the losers of the ASU versus Notre Dame match against the losers of the Northwestern and Oklahoma State match at 10 a.m. CST. The championship match between the winners will be played at 2 p.m.

Reach the reporter at lmnewa1@asu.edu or follow him on Twitter @Logan_Newsman